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Development of High-average-current Electron Injectors | ||
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Modern electron injectors consist of an RF structure with a photocathode integrated into the first full-wave half-cell or quarter-wave full-cell. While the cathode gradients in pulsed, normal-conducting RF injectors exceed 100 MV/m, which lead to substantial dark currents, those of cw normal-conducting and superconducting RF injectors are typically 10-20 MV/m. Emittance compensation has been modeled for both NCRF and SRF injectors to generate nC electron bunches with normalized rms emittance of ~2 mm-mrad. The use of solenoid and RF focusing in combination with relatively low cathode gradients can mitigate the space-charge-induced radial expansion in nC bunches, resulting in low emittance and also low dark currents. [1] D.C. Nguyen et al. "Overview of the 100mA average-current RF photoinjector" NIMA 528, 71 |